James A. Conrad v. New Hampshire Department of Safety & a.

167 N.H. 59
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 6, 2014
Docket2012-0440
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 167 N.H. 59 (James A. Conrad v. New Hampshire Department of Safety & a.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James A. Conrad v. New Hampshire Department of Safety & a., 167 N.H. 59 (N.H. 2014).

Opinion

BASSETT, J.

The plaintiff, James A. Conrad, appeals an order of the Superior Court (Smukler, J.) granting the defendants’ motion for a directed verdict on grounds that they were entitled to sovereign, official, and qualified immunity. The plaintiff brought suit against both defendants, New Hampshire Department of Safety (NHDS) and New Hampshire State Police Lieutenant Mark Myrdek, for false imprisonment, and against Myrdek for a violation of his civil rights pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (2012), *63 seeking damages for events that occurred on November 28, 2007. The defendants cross-appeal, raising evidentiary issues. We affirm.

I. Facts

The following facts are supported by the record. On November 28, 2007, the plaintiff was a state trooper working as a detective in the Major Crimes Unit. He had been employed as a state trooper since 1993.

In September 2007, the plaintiff was experiencing marital problems. On September 22, after the plaintiff reported his wife missing, he failed to stop for police officers when speeding through the town of Meredith in his personal vehicle. Thereafter, he requested state police assistance, including the canine unit, to search for his wife after her car was located behind a school. The plaintiffs unit commander, Captain Russell Conte, received a telephone call at approximately three o’clock in the morning from the plaintiffs troop commander, informing him of these events.

The report of this incident was provided to the director of the state police, Colonel Frederick Booth, and to Myrdek, commander of the state police professional standards unit. The report included the following facts: that the plaintiff had his wife’s car towed from the school parking lot; he returned to the parking lot to wait for her; and that, when she returned to the parking lot accompanied by another man, the plaintiff told him that he was “f-ing lucky to be breathing.” On Monday September 24, Booth met with the plaintiff and cautioned him to “be scrupulously careful about not bringing his personal life into his work life.”

In October, the plaintiffs wife filed for divorce. That same month, she called the state police, claiming that the plaintiff had locked himself in the bathroom with his service weapon. The plaintiff denied that the incident had occurred; nonetheless, he was placed on administrative leave. He was relieved of his service weapon and police cruiser, and referred to the Employee Assistance Program. The plaintiff returned to full duty in early November 2007, after a counselor determined that he was “currently not a danger to himself or others.”

On November 8, following a family court hearing attended by the plaintiff and his estranged wife, the court issued a temporary divorce decree. Pursuant to that decree, “Each party [was] restrained and enjoined from entering the home or the place of employment of the other party, and from harassing, intimidating or threatening the other party or his/her relatives or other household members.” The plaintiff testified that he was not aware of the restraining order prior to the incident on November 28, because his mail was still being sent to the marital home in Laconia and he was staying in Concord.

*64 On November 26, Conte received a telephone call from the Laconia Police Department, informing him that the plaintiffs wife had requested additional patrols by her home after she and the plaintiff had argued over the telephone the previous night. During that phone call, the plaintiff told his wife that he was “going to hell for what [he wanted] to do.”

Later on November 26, the plaintiff visited Conte’s office and told him he was thinking of resigning and “going . . . away.” Conte described the plaintiff as being “disheveled,” “emotional,” and “angry about his wife.” Given that the plaintiff was only eight months from full retirement, Conte encouraged him to seek the advice of an attorney before making a final decision. When asked by Conte about his “going to hell” statement, the plaintiff explained that it referred to him leaving his children, moving out of state, and withdrawing his retirement funds to split with his wife. Although Conte testified that he took the plaintiffs explanation at “face value,” he also had “reservations.” Accordingly, as soon as the plaintiff left his office, Conte went to speak with his superior to advise him of the conversation so that his superior could pass it on to Booth.

The next day, Conte received a telephone call from the plaintiffs wife, asking where the plaintiff was. She told Conte, among other things, that she thought the plaintiff had been in her residence the night before, and that he had erased messages on the answering machine and “moved some stuff around.” Following this conversation, Conte spoke by telephone with the wife’s attorney who confirmed that the temporary divorce decree included a provision prohibiting the plaintiff from entering his wife’s residence.

Conte was “very concerned” and immediately discussed the matter with Major Susan Forey, the head of the Field Operations Bureau, and Myrdek. Based upon information communicated to Conte by the plaintiff’s wife — including that the plaintiff may have been in her residence in violation of the temporary divorce decree, that she was concerned about the plaintiff’s welfare, and that the plaintiff had allegedly commented to her that he knew where her attorney lived — Conte, Forey, and Myrdek decided to open an internal affairs investigation and to have Myrdek speak with the plaintiff the following day.

On November 28, the plaintiff was attending an off-site training session when he was contacted by NHDS staff and told to report to Myrdek’s office at state police headquarters. The plaintiff arrived at Myrdek’s office at approximately 2:05 p.m. Myrdek informed him that he was subject to an administrative interview and provided him with a “Garrity Warning” containing the allegations that were the subject of the investigation. See Garrity v. New Jersey, 385 U.S. 493 (1967); Appeal of Waterman, 154 N.H. 437, 442 (2006) (before any interview of a state trooper may take place a *65 “Garrity Warning” must be given, “inform[ing] the accused that the purpose of questioning is to assist in determining whether to impose administrative discipline”). These allegations included “[t]he possible violation of a temporary court order regarding [the plaintiffs] pending divorce and comments [he] may have made to [his] wife regarding [his] actions and her attorney.” The plaintiff responded that the allegations were “bullshit” and that his wife “can’t prove I was in the house, because I wasn’t.” The plaintiff was agitated. The plaintiff stated that he wanted union representation and Myrdek allowed him to leave to make such arrangements.

The plaintiff contacted a union representative, Trooper Christopher LaPorte, who in turn asked to speak to Myrdek. The plaintiff returned to Myrdek’s office at approximately 2:30 p.m. and Myrdek spoke on the telephone with LaPorte.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 N.H. 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-a-conrad-v-new-hampshire-department-of-safety-a-nh-2014.