Federal Circuits, 1st Cir. (July 24, 1985)
Docket number: 85-1052,85-1309
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U.S. Supreme Court - Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800 (1982)
U.S. Supreme Court - Pierson v. Ray, 386 U.S. 547 (1967)
U.S. Supreme Court - Poller v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc., 368 U.S. 464 (1962)
U.S. Supreme Court - United States v. Diebold, Inc., 369 U.S. 654 <I>(per curiam)</I> (1962)
U.S. Supreme Court - Spalding v. Vilas, 161 U.S. 483 (1896)
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Cir. - Jack B. Wright, Appellee, v. South Arkansas Regional Health Center, Inc., and Edwin B. Alderson, Jr., L. Andrew Sheppard, Paul A. Abdella, Rodney Landes, Jr., James B. Weedman, the Rev. Charles W. Brown, and Dana Green, Individually and as Members of the Board of Directors of South Arkansas Regional Health Center, Inc., and Ray Scott, Director of the Department of Human Services, State of Arkansas, Appellant., 800 F.2d 199 (8th Cir. 1986) Appellee, v. South Arkansas Regional Health Center, Inc., and Edwin B. Alderson, Jr., L. Andrew Sheppard, Paul A. Abdella, Rodney Landes, Jr., James B. Weedman, the Rev. Charles W. Brown, and Dana Green, Individually and as Members of the Board of Directors of South Arkansas Regional Health Center, Inc., and Ray Scott, Director of the Department of Human Services, State of Arkansas, Appellant.
U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Cir. - Franklyn H. Craft, Herma Marsden, Harold Ramse, Kenneth Harrod, Mary Kuppinger Jordan, Roger Ward and Gene Neuswanger, on Behalf of Themselves and all Other Cabin Owners Within Custer State Park, Custer County, South Dakota, Similarly Situated, and the South Dakota Cabin Owners Association, an Unincorporated Association, Appellees, v. Owen Wipf, Robert Ingle, Walter Black, John Cimpl, Harvey Thayer, Robert Reder, David Brost, Neil Bein, Jeremiah Murphy, Richard Meyer and Marlon Thielsen, Individually and in Their Capacity as Present or Former Members of the South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks Commission, and Their Successors in Office; Jack Merwin, Individually, and in His Capacity as Former Secretary, South Dakota Department of Game, Fish and Parks; Jeff Stingley, Individually, and in His Capacity as Secretary, South Dakota Department of Game, Fish and Parks, and Warren Jackson, Individually, and in His Capacity as Division Director, Division of Custer State Park, South Dakota Department of Game, Fish..., 810 F.2d 170 (8th Cir. 1987) Herma Marsden, Harold Ramse, Kenneth Harrod, Mary Kuppinger Jordan, Roger Ward and Gene Neuswanger, on Behalf of Themselves and all Other Cabin Owners Within Custer State Park, Custer County, South Dakota, Similarly Situated, and the South Dakota Cabin Owners Association, an Unincorporated Association, Appellees, v. Owen Wipf, Robert Ingle, Walter Black, John Cimpl, Harvey Thayer, Robert Reder, David Brost, Neil Bein, Jeremiah Murphy, Richard Meyer and Marlon Thielsen, Individually and in Their Capacity as Present or Former Members of the South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks Commission, and Their Successors in Office; Jack Merwin, Individually, and in His Capacity as Former Secretary, South Dakota Department of Game, Fish and Parks; Jeff Stingley, Individually, and in His Capacity as Secretary, South Dakota Department of Game, Fish and Parks, and Warren Jackson, Individually, and in His Capacity as Division Director, Division of Custer State Park, South Dakota Department of Game, Fish...
Paula D. Silsby, Asst. U.S. Atty., Portland, Me., with whom Joseph H. Groff, III, Asst. U.S. Atty., and Richard S. Cohen, U.S. Atty., Portland, Me., were on brief, for third party defendants-appellants.
Gael Mahony, Boston, Mass., with whom John A.D. Gilmore, Richard M. Zielinski, Janet Sanders, Hill & Barlow, Boston, Mass., Thomas E. Peisch, Thomas D. Burns, Burns & Levinson, Boston, Mass., David C. King and Rudman & Winchell, Bangor, Me., were on brief for appellees.Before CAMPBELL, Chief Judge, BOWNES and BREYER, Circuit Judges.BOWNES, Circuit Judge.This is an appeal of the district court's denial of third-party defendants' motions for summary judgment. The third-party defendants, FBI Agents William F. Crate and Garry E.W. Barnes, asserted in their motions for summary judgment that they were absolutely immune from liability on the pendent state common-law claims and that they were entitled to the defense of qualified immunity on the federal statutory claims. The motions were denied because the district court found that there were disputed issues of material fact which precluded a ruling on the immunity of Crate and Barnes as a matter of law. Crate and Barnes appeal these summary judgment denials under the rule of Krohn v. United States, 742 F.2d 24 (1st Cir.1984), where we announced that we would take interlocutory jurisdiction of denials of claims of absolute and qualified immunity. Id. at 27-29. The Supreme Court has recently put its imprimatur on this procedure. Mitchell v. Forsyth, --- U.S. ----, ----, 105 S.Ct. 2806, 2815-2818, 86 L.Ed.2d 411 (1985).I. THE FACTSCrate and Barnes were brought into court as third-party defendants by three banks, Key Bancshares of Maine, Inc., Key Bank of Central Maine, Inc. and Key Bank of Southern Maine, Inc., and two bank officers, Wallace M. Haselton and Bernard K. Holdsworth. The banks and their officers had been sued by Joseph J. Ricci, Gerald Davidson, and their wholly owned corporations on a number of federal and state claims stemming from the banks' refusal to continue to loan money to Ricci and Davidson. Claiming, inter alia, that their refusal to continue loaning money to Ricci and Davidson was due to derogatory information about Ricci and Davidson provided by the FBI agents, the defendants brought a third-party action for contribution and indemnity against Crate and Barnes.During the four-year period prior to the events which led to the lawsuit, Ricci, Davidson and their various corporations had been major customers of the banks. Their businesses, which included a harness racetrack in Southern Maine (Scarborough Downs), residential programs for adolescents with behavioral problems, and a multi-unit apartment building, were heavily dependent upon the availability of credit and, over the four-year period from 1977 through 1981, Ricci and Davidson had borrowed more than a million dollars from the banks, some of it under a million-dollar line of credit agreement covering the period from July 1979 through September 1981. At least two additional loans were made to Ricci and Davidson during October and December of 1981.Sometime in October of 1981, Depositors Trust Company of Southern Maine, now Key Bank of Southern Maine, became aware of questionable loan transactions involving its President, Marco DeSalle, and a customer of the bank, Gerald Sneider. As a result of this discovery, DeSalle resigned as president in eary November. Around the same time, Conrad Bernier, a bank auditor, contacted the Maine Attorney General's office and the FBI in relation to these questionable transactions and these two agencies began a joint investigation into possible criminal wrongdoing at the bank. In early December, the investigator from the Maine Attorney General's office, Owen Colomb, asked Bernier to compile a list of bank customers with loan balances in excess of $100,000 so that he could sit down with the FBI and determine if the bank's transactions with any other customers ought to be investigated. Colomb was particularly interested in Ricci because he thought his name "rang a bell."On December 17, 1981, Colomb and another investigator from the Maine Attorney General's office met with FBI Agents Barnes and Crate and they reviewed the list of large borrowers. Colomb stated in his deposition that, after reviewing the list of names, Crate said that the FBI had information tying Ricci to organized crime, that there had been an investigation into race fixing at Scarborough Downs, and that there was unsubstantiated information that Ricci may have set up "Joey Napolitano" when he was hit.1 According to Barnes, prior to his review of the list, Colomb indicated to him that some interesting names had turned up, including Joe Ricci of Scarborough Downs. In his deposition, Barnes testified that at the December 17 meeting, Crate told Colomb that he was familiar with Joe Ricci as the owner of Scarborough Downs and that "the word was that a Ricci was associated with the death of Little Joe Napolitano." Barnes stated that either he or Crate said at this point that there was no way of knowing whether this was the same Ricci. Barnes also testified that either he or Crate clearly stated that there was no FBI investigation of Ricci. In his deposition, Crate testified that he told Colomb that he had heard that Ricci was connected to organized crime. He also said that he had heard that a Ricci had something to do with the murder of Little Joe Napolitano in New York City a few years earlier.According to an internal FBI document written by Barnes, Bernier (the bank auditor) called him the next day, December 18, and told him that he had received information that Joe Ricci was connected to organized crime and that the bank was concerned that if they did not approve loans to Ricci that there might be some retaliation. Barnes wrote in the memo that he told Bernier that the FBI could not furnish this kind of information and that this was a problem that the bank would have to handle. No such conversation was reported by Bernier.According to Colomb's deposition, however, he did not pass the information concerning Ricci on to Bernier until December 21. Bernier immediately reported this information to Wallace Haselton, the president of Depositors Corporation, now Key Bancshares of Maine. Haselton phoned Colomb and Colomb repeated this information to him. Later on that day, Joel Stevens, the new president of Depositors Trust Company of Southern Maine, also spoke to Colomb about Ricci. On December 21, Haselton instructed Stevens to terminate any lending relationship with Ricci, Davidson, or their corporations. Ricci has claimed that this decision was based upon the information provided by the FBI. The bank has claimed that its decision to terminate the lending relationship was due to a change in lending philosophy resulting from the appointment of a new president and the failure of the Ricci/Davidson corporations to file financial statements with the bank. In any event, Ricci was not informed of this decision until January 8, 1982.In late December, the bank told Ricci's lawyers about the information they had received from the FBI2 asking the attorneys not to reveal to Ricci the source of the information. Ricci met with his attorneys on December 29 and vehemently denied the allegations of organized crime connections and race fixing. Within the next week, Ricci's attorney informed the bank officers that Ricci had denied the truth of the FBI allegations. He also contacted Agent Barnes to complain about the allegations and Lawrence Sarhatt, Special Agent in Charge at the Boston FBI office, to arrange a conference to clear Ricci's name and a conference was set for January 19, 1982. On January 11, 1982, Ricci received a letter from Joel Stevens, President of Depositors Trust Company, stating that the bank would not continue to satisfy Ricci's credit needs due to a "shift in ... lending policy."On January 19, 1982, Agent Crate and his superior, Agent Thomas McGeorge, met with Ricci and his attorney to discuss the allegations made by Crate. At this meeting both McGeorge and Crate told Ricci that they had no personal knowledge that Ricci was connected to organized crime or that he had any involvement in the murder of Little Joe Napolitano. They also indicated that they could not either confirm or deny whether the FBI had a pending investigation of Ricci. Ricci requested that the FBI inform the Portland financial community that the prior allegations were false. This was never done. After this meeting, McGeorge wrote a memo dated February 2 to Special Agent in Charge Sarhatt summarizing the meeting with Ricci. He went on to say:It appears that any statements made to banking officials concerning Ricci's reputation could possibly have emanated from other law enforcement personnel. The writer feels that no adverse administrative action is required against any of our people in regards to this matter.However, the writer has discussed, at length, the matter with those Agents involved and reminded them that we must constantly exercise extreme caution when engaging other law enforcement people in discussions concerning FBI business.On the bottom of the memo is a handwritten notation, signed "JS," which says, "I concur. No further action necessary."At some point it became clear that most of the information about Ricci, in particular the allegations that he was connected to organized crime and the murder of Little Joe Napolitano, pertained to a different Joe Ricci who lived in Massachusetts. It is not clear from the record as it now stands precisely when this became known to Agents Crate and Barnes, but it is quite possible that they knew this by the time of the January 19 meeting with Ricci and his attorney. The record does, however, contain a memo from Agent Crate dated early January which indicates that the FBI did have some informant information connecting the Maine Joe Ricci with race fixing at Scarborough Downs.In mid-February, 1982, Ricci's Boston counsel contacted Wallace Haselton, President of Depositors Corporation, and threatened the bank with a civil suit on behalf of Ricci if the bank did not restore his credit. The attorney told Haselton and the bank's attorney, Frank Chapman, that the FBI information was erroneous. The bank urged the attorney to provide proof of Ricci's innocence. Ricci did not obtain written evidence that the information given to the bank was false until he received a June 3, 1982 letter from FBI headquarters in Washington, D.C. as a result of a request under the Freedom of Information Act. The letter stated that there was no record in Washington that Ricci had been the subject of an FBI investigation. The letter also stated that not all information collected by field offices is forwarded to Washington, such as "cases in which the perpetrators of the violation were not identified; cases in which the United States Attorney declined prosecution; and cases in which the allegations were unsubstantiated or not within the jurisdiction of the FBI."On February 19, 1982, there was a meeting at the office of Frank Chapman, counsel for the banks, between bank officers and Agent Barnes. Precisely how the meeting was set up, who attended and what was said is a matter of some dispute. According to Barnes' deposition, he had arranged the meeting with Chapman to discuss another client of the bank whom he was investigating. When he arrived for the meeting, Chapman told him that Wallace Haselton wanted to speak with him. At that point both Haselton and Bernard Holdsworth, Vice President and Director of Depositors Corporation, now Key Bancshares of Maine, came to Chapman's office. According to Barnes, when Haselton arrived, he told Barnes that Ricci's Boston attorney had threatened to sue the bank because it had refused to lend him any more money. Haselton went on to apologize to Barnes for bringing him and the FBI into this matter and proceeded to recount some of the allegations concerning Ricci's connections to organized crime. He then asked Barnes how he felt about this situation and how the FBI felt about it. Barnes testified that he responded that Haselton shouldn't worry about the FBI and that the FBI was very comfortable with its position in this matter. Barnes expressly denied making any positive statements of fact concerning Ricci during this meeting or of making any statement as to what he would say if called upon to testify. Barnes also testified that Owen Colomb of the Maine Attorney General's office was not present at this meeting.According to Attorney Chapman, he arranged the meeting with Barnes through Owen Colomb, since Colomb had been the intermediary. Chapman testified that he told Colomb that the bank needed to have the Ricci information confirmed because they had acted upon it and Ricci was denying the truth of the allegations. He also testified that he asked Colomb to have the FBI check the information again before they met. According to Chapman, Colomb did attend the February 19 meeting, along with Barnes, Haselton and Holdsworth. Chapman testified that he made it clear from the beginning of the meeting that its purpose was for the bank to get the Ricci allegations 'from the horse's mouth,' in particular, the allegations about Ricci's connections to organized crime, involvement in the murder of Little Joe Napolitano, the existence of an active strike force investigation concerning Ricci, and race fixing. According to Chapman, Barnes told them at the meeting that his partner Crate was the source of the information and that he had gotten it directly from him. He also said that he had checked back to make sure it was still accurate. He then went on to reassert the allegations concerning Ricci: he was connected to the Mafia, there was an open FBI file on him, he was involved in the assassination of Napolitano, he was the subject of a strike force investigation, he was involved in race fixing, and he might be laundering drug money through the treatment centers. Chapman also testified that he told both Colomb and Barnes that if Ricci ever brought a lawsuit that the bank would need both of them as witnesses.According to Haselton, he had Chapman arrange the meeting with Barnes after the bank was threatened with a lawsuit by Ricci's Boston attorney. Haselton did not indicate who was at the meeting, but he did testify that Barnes told him that the FBI had a long-standing investigation of Ricci and that they had substantial evidence of his involvement in organized crime and the murder of Napolitano. Barnes assured him that this was reliable information and that the FBI was very confident of it.Holdsworth initially testified that there were two meetings on February 19, one with Colomb and one with Barnes, but he later corrected his deposition testimony to say that there was only one meeting on February 19 and that he, Haselton, Chapman, Colomb and Barnes were present. According to him, the purpose of the meeting was to see if there had been any further developments in what was known about Ricci and to find out what the FBI's position would be if the bank found it necessary to disclose the source of their information. According to Holdsworth's corrected deposition, Barnes told them that Ricci was presently being investigated by the organized crime unit of the FBI, which was represented in Maine by Agent Crate, both with regard to Ricci's involvement in organized crime and the murder of Napolitano. Barnes also said that this information would stand up in court and that the FBI would testify as the existence and nature of their investigation.Agent Crate testified that sometime in February or March Barnes told him that he was going up to Augusta to talk to the bank about Ricci and that after Barnes came back he said that he had met with a lot more people than he had expected and that as soon as he got there they had "raked him over the coals" about this matter.Colomb denies either arranging the meeting with Barnes or attending the meeting and has offered office time records to prove that he was not present.On February 22, 1982, the bank sent Ricci a letter stating that in order to be considered for any further credit he would have to provide extensive financial statements and would also have to refute any derogatory information which the bank had received. Sometime in July of 1982, after all attempts at resolving the situation out of court had failed, Ricci commenced a lawsuit against the banks, Haselton and Holdsworth.It would appear that, on the two occasions the FBI agents discussed Ricci, December 17, 1981, and February 19, 1982, it is the latter which provides the bank with the strongest case for indemnity or contribution. Reviewing the record in the light most favorable to the party opposing the motion for summary judgment, Poller v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc., 368 U.S. 464, 473, 82 S.Ct. 486, 491, 7 L.Ed.2d 458 (1962), and indulging all inferences favorable to that party, United States v. Diebold, Inc., 369 U.S. 654, 655, 82 S.Ct. 993, 994, 8 L.Ed.2d 176 (1962), there is no evidence that the FBI agents did more than confuse the two Riccis at the December meeting with Colomb. However, at the February 19 meeting, the record suggests that, at the very least, Barnes negligently failed to set the record straight as to the Ricci allegations or, at the worst, deliberately lied to the bank even though he knew the information was incorrect. For purposes of our immunity analysis, therefore, we will focus upon the events of February 19, 1982.II. THE COMMON-LAW CLAIMS--ABSOLUTE IMMUNITYWe shall focus our analysis of the FBI agents' immunity from the common-law claims upon defendants' allegation that the agents either negligently or intentionally misrepresented Ricci's criminal backround to them. The misrepresentation charges are the basis for the defendants' claim of a right of indemnity against the agents. The defendants allege that the misrepresentations constituted tortious conduct vis-a-vis them and they are entitled to recompense for any injury suffered by them on account of their reliance upon these misrepresentations. Technically, we should also evaluate the agents' immunity from liability for interference with contractual and advantageous relationships, negligence, defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress because the defendants have also claimed a right of contribution from the agents for any torts for which they may be liable to Ricci. However, we need not devote a separate analysis to these four additional torts. The underlying acts are the same regardless of the legal theory and our analysis of both an intentional and negligent tort covers the same range of conduct as the four additional torts also at issue in the case. For simplicity's sake, therefore, the analysis will focus upon the claims of misrepresentation with the understanding that it applies equally to the other torts as well.It is now well-settled that the immunity available to federal officials charged with committing common-law torts is absolute, not qualified. Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 807-08, 102 S.Ct. 2727, 2732-2733, 73 L.Ed.2d 396 (1982); Butz v. Economou, 438 U.S. 478, 489-95, 98 S.Ct. 2894, 2902-2905, 57 L.Ed.2d 895 (1978). The scope of this immunity is such that it cannot be defeated by allegations or proof of deliberate malice on the part of the federal official so charged, Barr v. Matteo, 360 U.S. 564, 571-75, 79 S.Ct. 1335, 1339-1342, 3 L.Ed.2d 1434 (1959), as long as the conduct in question falls within the "outer perimeter of [the official's] ... line of duty." Id. at 575, 79 S.Ct. at 1341. While it might seem that deliberately malicious conduct ought not be considered to fall within the scope of a federal official's duty, failure to include such conduct under the protection of the privilege would require federal officials to work "under an apprehension that the motives that control ... official conduct may, at any time, become the subject of inquiry in a civil suit for damages." Spalding v. Vilas, 161 U.S. 483, 498, 16 S.Ct. 631, 637, 40 L.Ed. 780 (1896). Although this concept of absolute immunity allows some abuses of official power to go unredressed, it is necessary for the effective administration of government that government workers be able to perform their jobs without fear of liability. Gregoire v. Biddle,Try vLex for FREE for 3 days
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