Hansen v. Cannon

122 F. App'x 265
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 29, 2004
DocketNo. 04-2161
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 122 F. App'x 265 (Hansen v. Cannon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hansen v. Cannon, 122 F. App'x 265 (7th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

[267]*267ORDER

This action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 arises from the court-ordered eviction of Robert and Donna Hansen from then-home in Tilton, Illinois. In essence the Hansens contend that Tilton’s mayor and police chief, along with two Vermillion County deputy sheriffs, seized or facilitated the seizure of personal property from an adjacent lot also owned by the Hansens but not covered by the eviction order. In a previous appeal we vacated the grant of summary judgment for the defendants on grounds of qualified immunity. Hansen v. Cannon, 26 Fed.Appx. 555 (7th Cir.2001). On remand the district court again granted summary judgment for the defendants, in part on the basis of qualified immunity. We affirm in part and vacate and remand in part.

The Hansens owned adjoining Lots 8 and 9 in a section of a Tilton subdivision. A house and two garages sit on Lot 9, and another garage sits alone on Lot 8. After the Hansens mortgaged Lot 9 — but not Lot 8 — and defaulted, a circuit court in Vermillion County ordered the sheriff to take possession of the lot and turn it over to the lender. The order describes Lot 9 by number and address, 121 West Fourth Street. The order makes no mention of Lot 8 at 119 West Fourth. Through intermediaries the lender contracted with Rick Woodard to remove the Hansens’ personal property from the site.

On November 5, 1997, Deputy Sheriff Larry Lillard left an eviction notice under the door at 121 West Fourth while the Hansens were away. Woodard’s crew then began work, and during that day and the next removed property from both the house and garages on Lot 9 and the garage on Lot 8. On November 6 a towing company hauled five vehicles from Lot 8; a sheriff’s deputy with the initials “T.D.” was involved in the towing and signed a tow report that day. At least three of those vehicles apparently ended up in the possession of the sheriff’s office. (Woodard’s crew also took the Hansens’ exotic birds, but Robert Hansen later conceded that the birds were likely seized from Lot 9, not Lot 8 as the Hansens alleged in their complaint.) Deputy Lillard would later admit having reservations about whether the garage on Lot 8 was part of the foreclosed real estate, but in an affidavit he explained that an unidentified Tilton police officer assured him (he did not say when) that the house and garages were all on one parcel. Woodard testified by deposition that Mayor Conrad Wantland told him (on “the day of the eviction,” although he did not say which day) that there was just one property. Woodard said he also spoke to Chief Charles Wolfe the same day he spoke to Mayor Wantland, though he did not say about what.

The Hansens were not present until the third day, November 7, when they met their lawyer, Richard Kurth, at the scene. Upon their arrival the Hansens told Woodard’s employees that they could not remove any property from Lot 8. That prompted a call to Tilton police, and Chief Wolfe responded. Kurth and Robert Hansen explained to Chief Wolfe that the order did not apply to Lot 8. Robert Hansen testified in his deposition that Wolfe told one of Woodard’s employees to continue removing property from Lot 8 and threatened to arrest the Hansens if they interfered. Deputy Sheriff Daniel Auterman arrived shortly afterward; he was acting on the orders of Deputy Sheriff Robert Cannon, who was concerned about safety because the Hansens apparently owned guns. Auterman told the Hansens that Cannon, who was not then present, was in charge. Robert Hansen’s own testimony is conflicting about whether Auterman ech[268]*268oed Wolfe’s warning that they would be arrested if they did not leave.

The Hansens lingered and tried to explain that the order applied only to one of the lots, and Wolfe responded, “That’s not what we were told.” Meanwhile, attorney Kurth departed to obtain proof that the order did not encompass Lot 8. It is undisputed that Kurth also telephoned Deputy Cannon and advised him that Woodard’s employees were taking property from the wrong lot. During discovery Cannon testified that he responded to Kurth’s call by contacting an unnamed sheriffs deputy at the scene, who told him that someone “associated with the Village of Tilton” had confirmed that there was only one parcel of real estate. But none of the parties tells us what if anything Cannon did with this information. What is clear is that Kurth returned to Lot 8 after speaking with Cannon and apparently convinced Woodard’s employees to stop removing property from Lot 8, and to unload from their truck anything they had already taken that day.

In the days that followed, the Hansens made minimal effort to retrieve their personal property. Deputy Cannon was the sheriffs employee responsible for disposing of the vehicles towed on November 6. Cannon mailed notices that three of the cars (he insisted that he did not know about the other two) would be sold or destroyed if not retrieved; he addressed the notices for two of the cars to 121 West Fourth Street and the other to the address on the registrations for the vehicle, which named Donna and Kenneth (not Robert) Hansen. The post office returned the notices undelivered. During discovery, though, Hansen admitted that he knew where the cars were stored, and that he did not retrieve them before they were “junked.” Hansen also knew where the birds were being kept but did not retrieve them, either.

The Hansens filed suit in November 1999 against Mayor Wantland, Chief Wolfe, and Deputies Cannon and Auterman. Essentially, the Hansens claimed that the defendants violated their Fourth Amendment rights in connection with the seizure of their personal property from Lot 8. After staying discovery, the district court in July 2001 granted summary judgment for all four defendants on the basis of qualified immunity. The court concluded that the defendants could have reasonably believed that the two lots were a single property given their physical appearance and the representation to that effect from unidentified village officials. We held, however, that the record did not support the court’s conclusion that the defendants reasonably believed both lots were covered by the order of possession, and that the district court had improperly stayed discovery, which might have resolved questions about what the defendants knew. Hansen, 26 Fed.Appx. at 559, 2001 WL 1637660, at *3.

Following our December 2001 remand, the proceedings were marked by delay, mostly attributable to the Hansens. Discovery deadlines were extended, often after they were already missed, and nearly a year after our remand only one deposition — Woodard’s—had been taken. Robert Hansen frequently cited his health as cause for delay, and in fact the Hansens avoided being deposed until after a September 2003 order compelling their appearance. For their part Deputies Cannon and Auterman sought sanctions or dismissal under Fed.R.Civ.P. 37 but were unsuccessful.

In October 2003, at the suggestion of the district court, the Hansens accepted assistance from two law students. Shortly afterward the court set an April 2004 trial [269]*269date and gave the Hansens until mid-March 2004 to depose the defendants. Early in 2004, however, the defendants moved again for summary judgment, and the Hansens responded with a third amended complaint.

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122 F. App'x 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hansen-v-cannon-ca7-2004.