Dean Koch v. State of Ohio

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 2, 2021
Docket20-3334
StatusUnpublished

This text of Dean Koch v. State of Ohio (Dean Koch v. State of Ohio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dean Koch v. State of Ohio, (6th Cir. 2021).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 21a0263n.06

No. 20-3334

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

DEAN KOCH, ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) FILED ) Jun 02, 2021 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk v. ) ) STATE OF OHIO, Department of Natural ) Resources, Division of Wildlife; JAMES ) ON APPEAL FROM THE ZEHRINGER, Director Department of Natural ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT Resources; SCOTT ZODY, Chief Department of ) COURT FOR THE NORTHERN Natural Resources, Division of Wildlife; RANDALL ) DISTRICT OF OHIO MEYER, Inspector General; GINO BARNA, Ohio ) Wildlife Officer, Erie County, Ohio; BRIAN BURY, ) Ohio Wildlife Officer, Erie County, Ohio; GARY ) MANLEY, Ohio Wildlife Officer, Erie County, ) Ohio, individually and in their official capacities, ) Defendants-Appellees. )

BEFORE: BATCHELDER, WHITE, and BUSH, Circuit Judges.

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff-Appellant Dean Koch appeals the dismissal

of his suit against the Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR), Ohio’s inspector general,

and five ODNR officials, alleging malicious prosecution and six other claims, as either barred by

sovereign immunity or for failing to state a claim. We AFFIRM.

I.

For purposes of deciding this appeal, we accept as true the factual allegations in Koch’s

Complaint. Those allegations are as follows. No. 20-3334, Koch v. State of Ohio, et al.

Koch is a commercial fisherman on Lake Erie and the owner of White’s Landing Fisheries,

Inc. in Sandusky, Ohio. From 1974 to 2008, Koch served as president of the Ohio Fish Producers

Association, an organization representing commercial fisherman on Lake Erie.

Over the decades Koch served as president of the Ohio Fish Producers Association, Koch

was at times critical of decisions made by the ODNR. For example, in 2000, Koch wrote to a

member of the Ohio House of Representatives to criticize rules implemented by the ODNR that

Koch believed would reduce the allowable catch of Ohio’s commercial fisherman. In 2011, Koch

wrote to then-Ohio Governor John Kasich criticizing ODNR for similar reasons, and circulated a

letter opposing legislation that Koch believed would have ended commercial fishing in Ohio.

Koch has also been quoted in at least one media publication criticizing the allocation of fishing

resources away from Ohio’s commercial fisherman.

Over the same time period, Koch had a difficult relationship with local fishing authorities.

From 1974 to 1985, Koch was arrested fifteen times by Sandusky ODNR officers (Koch does not

specify precisely what for). In 1988, Koch was arrested for illegally catching walleye. After the

1988 arrest, Koch filed an internal complaint against the Sandusky office. George Bauer, an

ODNR officer from the Xenia office, investigated the complaint in June 1989. Koch alleges that

Bauer found that Sandusky officials were “intentionally ‘nickel and diming’ Koch to keep him in

court and cost him attorneys’ fees and court costs,” and that one of the defendants here, Gino

Barna, destroyed his notes from the 1988 arrest.

In 1999, Koch’s truck was seized by ODNR officers for another alleged illegal catch.

Koch alleges that in 2007, the State of Ohio and the ODNR proposed buying out

commercial trap-net fisherman for approximately two cents on the dollar. Koch and the Ohio Fish

Producers Association opposed the plan, which eventually failed. Koch alleges that the State and

2 No. 20-3334, Koch v. State of Ohio, et al.

the ODNR then offered to increase the quota of yellow perch available to Ohio’s commercial

fisherman if they removed Koch from the presidency of the Ohio Fish Producers Association. The

Complaint does not specify who from the ODNR communicated this offer or how it was conveyed.

Koch was subsequently voted out of the Fish Producers Association presidency.

In 2008, the Ohio General Assembly passed Senate Bill 77, which limited commercial

perch fishing in the western basin of Lake Erie. The legislation also contained a provision

mandating the permanent revocation of the commercial fishing licenses of anyone committing

three misdemeanor fishing violations (“strikes”) over a period of ten years. In 2008, Koch was

cited 42 times for fishing violations (the Complaint does not specify what each citation was for).

Koch alleges that “due to plea agreements offered by the Defendants,” no other commercial

fisherman charged with fishing misdemeanors was charged with a strikable offense. Koch was

not offered a plea deal and was subsequently convicted of one count of not having proper

monitoring equipment, a strikable offense.

In 2013, Koch received a second strike after he was convicted of taking undersized perch.

In 2014, Defendants ODNR officers Bury and Abele seized fish from Koch’s boat. The Complaint

does not explain why, but incident reports in the record indicate that a routine ODNR inspection

found Koch in possession of undersized perch. Koch complained about the seizure to Defendant

Barna, an ODNR supervisor, disputing how the fish were measured and complaining that the

officers were rude. After taking statements from Bury and Abele, Barna issued an investigative

report finding no just cause to discipline Bury, without mentioning Abele. Koch then wrote to

Defendant Zody, the ODNR chief at the time, to request that the investigation of Bury be reopened.

Zody declined, explaining that Koch’s complaints had not been substantiated by Barna. Koch in

turn filed a complaint with Defendant Randall Meyer, Ohio’s inspector general, alleging selective

3 No. 20-3334, Koch v. State of Ohio, et al.

arrest and prosecution. On July 15, 2016, Meyer wrote Koch “stating that the Intake Committee

of the Inspector General’s Office determined that there was not just cause for an investigation.”

R. 1, PID. 9 (Compl. ¶ 60); R. 10-2, PID. 136. Ten days later, Koch asked Meyer to reconsider

his decision. Meyer replied on October 18, 2016, informing Koch that the Intake Committee again

reviewed Koch’s complaint and “found no wrong doing [sic] on the part of the agency[.]” R. 1,

PID. 10 (Compl. ¶ 62); R. 10-2, PID. 139.

In August 2015, between the time Zody declined to reopen the investigation of Bury and

the time Koch complained to Meyer about the 2014 incident, Koch was arrested by Bury and

Manley for illegally fishing in Lake Erie’s western basin. A conviction would cause Koch to lose

his fishing license, since it would be his third misdemeanor fishing offense in ten years. Koch’s

Complaint does not provide further detail on the charge, other than to note that the prosecution

allegedly should have considered “a documented collision with a freighter moving his nets” when

deciding whether to charge him. R. 1, PID. 8 (Compl. ¶ 46). The district court took notice of the

state court’s filings in the matter, since the 2015 arrest serves as the basis for Koch’s malicious

prosecution claim. As detailed in State v. Whites Landing Fisheries, LLC, Koch was informed in

April 2015 that there would be no yellow perch allocated for commercial fishing in the western

basin of Lake Erie. 91 N.E.3d 315, 317 (Ohio Ct. App. 2017). In November 2015, Koch was

charged with harvesting more than two hundred pounds of yellow perch from the western basin of

Lake Erie. Id. at 317. Koch initially won dismissal at the trial level on the ground that the

regulations defining the western basin’s boundary lines were unconstitutionally vague. Id. at 318.

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