Deborah Hagedorn v. David Cattani

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 7, 2017
Docket16-4254
StatusUnpublished

This text of Deborah Hagedorn v. David Cattani (Deborah Hagedorn v. David Cattani) 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
Deborah Hagedorn v. David Cattani, (6th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION File Name: 17a0613n.06

Nos. 16-4254

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED DEBORAH HAGEDORN, ) Nov 07, 2017 ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT DAVID CATTANI; GEOFFREY ESSER, ) COURT FOR THE NORTHERN ) DISTRICT OF OHIO Defendants-Appellees, ) ) DAVID PHILLIPS, ) ) Defendant. )

BEFORE: GIBBONS, KETHLEDGE, and DONALD, Circuit Judges.

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge. Deborah Hagedorn alleges that three local

officials in Timberlake, Ohio—David Cattani, Geoffrey Esser, and David Phillips—improperly

pursued criminal charges against her in retaliation for her criticism of the village government.

Hagedorn sued Cattani, Esser, and Phillips for First Amendment retaliation under 42 U.S.C.

§ 1983 as well as violations of Article I, Section 11 of the Ohio Constitution. The district court

granted summary judgment to the officials on all counts. We affirm.

I.

A.

Timberlake, Ohio, is a small village of six- to seven-hundred residents just north of

Cleveland along the shores of Lake Erie. David Cattani served as Timberlake’s mayor from

January 2012 through December 2015. Although Timberlake contracts with nearby No. 16-4254 Hagedorn v. Cattani et al.

municipalities for many services, it maintains a small police force. David Phillips was the police

chief until he was removed from office in October 2013. At that point, Geoffrey Esser, an

officer in the department, was named acting chief.

Deborah Hagedorn lived in Timberlake from May 2001 until April 2016. In late 2012,

Hagedorn came to believe that the Timberlake Police Department was engaged in an “aggressive

[traffic] ticketing campaign” along a thoroughfare that connected Timberlake with nearby

communities. DE 55-1, Hagedorn Decl., Page ID 1512. She began investigating how the village

was using any additional traffic-ticket revenue. In the course of her investigation, Hagedorn

uncovered evidence that Phillips was abusing his powers as police chief for his own financial

gain.1

B.

On July 11, 2013, Hagedorn engaged in surveillance of the village’s service garage to

monitor Phillips’ activity. When Hagedorn arrived at the service garage early that morning, she

waited outside because the door to the garage was locked. At approximately 6:35 a.m., Esser,

while on a routine patrol of the village, encountered Hagedorn at the garage. In a police report

documenting this encounter, Esser stated that shortly after he arrived at the garage, Hagedorn

“jumped in front of [his] vehicle from a weed and brush covered area behind the East side of the

building[.]” DE 44-4, Esser Police Report, Page ID 753. Hagedorn was pointing a device at

Esser that he believed to be either a phone or a camera. Esser’s report describes what happened

next:

1 Hagedorn places great emphasis on her interactions with village officials in the course of her investigation to argue that these officials acted with a retaliatory motive. Because our decision rests on a determination that there was probable cause for the disorderly conduct and telecommunications-harassment charges (and not on whether the village officials acted with a retaliatory motive), we need not review the entirety of what occurred. To the extent it is helpful, the district court opinion provides an accurate and comprehensive account of the background. We will, however, summarize the events surrounding each criminal charge.

-2- No. 16-4254 Hagedorn v. Cattani et al.

I immediately exited my vehicle and asked her what she was doing. Hagedorn replied saying, I know what your [sic] doing, I know what you guys are up to, and then pulled her bicycle out from the same area she was concealing herself behind the building. I explained that I was checking the building, that I regularly perform checks of the building, and again asked her what she was doing in that area. Hagedorn got on her bicycle laughed, called me officer Esser, began yelling, swearing, and told me that I’m an “Asshole”. I advised her not to be disorderly and explained that if anything was taken or damaged, her presence would make her the suspect and advised her to stay out of the area. She continued laughing and yelling as she rode away telling me that I’m an “idiot[.]”

Id. Esser then confirmed that there was no sign of attempted forced entry and no damage to the

garage. As he was preparing to leave, Hagedorn returned and “demanded” that Esser open the

garage to show her what was inside. Id. Esser refused to do so and began telling Hagedorn that

he would be “generating a report about the situation,” but she “began laughing and yelling as she

left the area.” Id.

Esser asserts that he had “no intention” of citing Hagedorn at the time of the incident.

DE 44-3, Esser Decl., Page ID 748. He claims that he created a police report “simply to

memorialize for the record what had transpired because [Hagedorn] has been known to make

unsubstantiated allegations.” Id. Shortly after the incident, however, a resident called the police

to make an anonymous report of a “disturbance in the service garage area” because “a female

was yelling at someone and calling them names[.]” DE 44-4, Esser Police Report, Page ID 753.

Esser spoke with the caller and confirmed that the disturbance was his exchange with Hagedorn.

The caller later identified himself to police as George Transky, a Timberlake resident who lived

near the service garage. Esser presented Transky’s complaint to Timberlake prosecutor Michael

Germano, who reviewed the allegations and charged Hagedorn with disorderly conduct. Three

days after the incident, Hagedorn received a citation for Village of Timberlake Codified

Ordinance § 648.04(a)(2).

-3- No. 16-4254 Hagedorn v. Cattani et al.

Hagedorn’s case, State of Ohio v. Hagedorn, No. 13-CRB-02427, proceeded to a bench

trial before a Willoughby Municipal Court magistrate. After hearing testimony from Esser,

Transky, and Hagedorn, the magistrate held that although there was sufficient probable cause to

charge Hagedorn, he was obligated to acquit Hagedorn “based on all the elements and offense

and the situation and the fact that it was between Ms. Hagedorn and [an] officer,” and because

“calling an officer an asshole is protected speech.” DE 18-1, Trial Tr., Page ID 188–89.

C.

As a result of her email exchanges with Cattani between October 2014 and July 2015,

Hagedorn was also charged, on four occasions, with telecommunications harassment pursuant to

Ohio Rev. Code § 2917.21(A)(5). The issue was Hagedorn’s continued use of Cattani’s personal

email address after Cattani asked her to stop contacting him at that account and instead to use his

village address if she needed to contact him in his capacity as mayor.

From the time Cattani was first elected to the town council in 2006, all emails sent to

Cattani’s village email address were automatically forwarded to his personal account. When

Cattani responded to those messages, the recipient received a message from his personal email

address. In October 2013, Cattani started forwarding his village emails to a different personal

Gmail account. He did so because Gmail allowed him to use his village email address, instead of

his personal email address, when responding to messages. Cattani states that doing so also

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