Allen Pigeon v. Hazen Stone

CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJuly 11, 2025
Docket25-AP-018
StatusUnpublished

This text of Allen Pigeon v. Hazen Stone (Allen Pigeon v. Hazen Stone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen Pigeon v. Hazen Stone, (Vt. 2025).

Opinion

VERMONT SUPREME COURT Case No. 25-AP-018 109 State Street Montpelier VT 05609-0801 802-828-4774 www.vermontjudiciary.org

Note: In the case title, an asterisk (*) indicates an appellant and a double asterisk (**) indicates a cross- appellant. Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.

ENTRY ORDER

JULY TERM, 2025

Allen Pigeon* v. Hazen Stone et al. } APPEALED FROM: } Superior Court, Chittenden Unit, } Civil Division } CASE NO. 23-CV-05407 Trial Judge: Samuel Hoar, Jr.

In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:

Plaintiff Allen Pigeon appeals a trial court order dismissing his claims against various State defendants. We affirm.

I. Background

In December 2023, plaintiff filed suit against the State of Vermont, a Deputy State’s Attorney, the former Vermont Attorney General, two Assistant Attorneys General, eight members of the Vermont State Police (VSP), and one private citizen, Hazen Stone. His complaint included the following factual allegations.

In April 2020, an officer of the St. Albans Police Department (SAPD) responded to the scene of a single-vehicle accident near plaintiff’s home. Plaintiff’s stepdaughter, M.S., was the driver. There was a loaded handgun in her front passenger’s seat and she falsely denied that she was intoxicated. While she was being processed for driving under the influence (DUI), M.S. told the officer that plaintiff’s son, Z.P.—who was also an SAPD officer at the time—molested her when she was a child.

M.S.’s father, defendant Hazen Stone, had called a VSP sergeant earlier that day to report that plaintiff and Z.P. had recently assaulted M.S. at her home after learning that she had begun telling others that Z.P. molested her. After M.S.’s DUI processing was complete, two VSP troopers interviewed her about the substance of her father’s statement.

M.S. alleged that several weeks earlier, two masked men she recognized as plaintiff and Z.P. entered her home while she was sleeping, threw her outside, and burned her all over her back with the tip of a cigar in a plastic holder. She reported that the cigar tip was still on her property, laying in her firepit where she had thrown it after later finding it on her steps. M.S. also told one of the troopers that she was an alcoholic and did not take medication for her ADHD.

The next day, the VSP located a cigar tip in a plastic holder in M.S.’s firepit and preserved it for forensic analysis. They also interviewed numerous people about M.S.’s claims, including plaintiff and his wife. Plaintiff denied having been at M.S.’s home on the night of the alleged attack. He and his wife explained that they had recently been in conflict with M.S. regarding her visitation with her daughter—for whom they were serving as foster parents—as well as their pending petition for guardianship. Plaintiff was arrested following the interview. News of his arrest was reported by the media, damaging his reputation and negatively impacting his business.

A Franklin County Deputy State’s Attorney charged plaintiff with simple assault, felony obstruction of justice, burglary, kidnapping, and second-degree unlawful restraint. See 13 V.S.A. §§ 1023(a)(1), 3015, 1201(c)(1), 2405(a)(1)(C), 2406(a)(3). The charges were based on a probable-cause affidavit authored by one of the VSP defendants. Although M.S. allowed the troopers to photograph her back during her interview, the affidavit did not disclose the existence of these photographs. The criminal court found that probable cause existed to support the State’s charges.

Law enforcement continued its investigation after plaintiff’s arraignment. An exhaustive search of plaintiff’s home did not lead to the discovery of any inculpatory evidence. In May 2020, police learned that while the DNA of an unknown male had been found on the cigar tip, testing did not reveal the presence of DNA belonging to either plaintiff or Z.P.

In June 2020, the Attorney General’s Office took over plaintiff’s prosecution and continued the investigation. Over the following months, police continued to discover evidence tending to exculpate plaintiff and Z.P. and indicate that M.S. had lied to law enforcement.

Plaintiff’s attorney deposed M.S. in mid-December 2020. She was extremely hostile, declined to answer many questions, and continued to contradict her prior sworn statements. She ultimately left the room and refused to complete the deposition. At the end of the month, the State dismissed all charges against plaintiff and Z.P. without prejudice.

In November 2022, the criminal court granted plaintiff’s petition to expunge the charges against him. Z.P. was also exonerated of the same alleged crimes.

Based on these and other allegations, plaintiff raised claims of malicious prosecution, false arrest, assault and battery in relation to his arrest, false imprisonment, defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress (IIED), civil conspiracy, and civil-rights violations and failure to intervene under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. He also alleged that the State was vicariously liable for the individual State defendants’ conduct under the doctrine of respondeat superior.

The State defendants moved to dismiss under Vermont Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), arguing that plaintiff’s complaint failed to state a claim against any of them on which relief could be granted. They contended that the existence of probable cause supporting plaintiff’s criminal charges was fatal to the majority of his theories of liability, and that the remaining counts asserted against them were variously barred by sovereign, official, prosecutorial, and qualified immunity.

2 The trial court issued a written decision granting the motion to dismiss. Given the nature of plaintiff’s arguments on appeal, it is necessary to recite its reasoning in some detail here.

The court first recognized that, in order to prevail on his malicious-prosecution claim, plaintiff needed to show that the individual State defendants either initiated or continued the case without probable cause. See Bacon v. Reimer & Braunstein, LLP, 2007 VT 57, ¶ 4, 182 Vt. 553 (mem.). It further explained that “virtually all” of plaintiff’s other claims against the State defendants were “premised—directly or indirectly—on an alleged lack of probable cause.” It noted that: plaintiff’s assault and battery claims were expressly predicated on the allegation that he was arrested without a reasonable belief of probable cause; the existence of a valid legal process—i.e., a prosecution commenced on probable cause—defeated his false-arrest and false- imprisonment claims; given the existence of probable cause, none of the factual allegations in the complaint amounted to “outrageous conduct” as necessary to maintain his IIED claims; for the same reason, plaintiff failed to plead the existence of false and defamatory statements required to support his defamation claims; and plaintiff’s civil-conspiracy claims and respondeat-superior theory thus failed for lack of an actionable underlying tort. The court therefore agreed with the State defendants—in order to go forward with the majority of his claims, plaintiff needed to plead an absence of probable cause.

The civil division’s subsequent analysis of plaintiff’s complaint relied heavily on our decision in Lay v. Pettengill, 2011 VT 127, 191 Vt. 141. There, we explained that “[t]he mere fact that a criminal tribunal found probable cause normally provides a presumption that probable cause existed in the context of a subsequent wrongful prosecution claim.” Id. ¶ 22.

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Allen Pigeon v. Hazen Stone, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-pigeon-v-hazen-stone-vt-2025.