Klein v. Vanek

86 F. Supp. 2d 812, 53 Fed. R. Serv. 1435, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 934, 2000 WL 126935
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 31, 2000
Docket96 C 5834
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 86 F. Supp. 2d 812 (Klein v. Vanek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klein v. Vanek, 86 F. Supp. 2d 812, 53 Fed. R. Serv. 1435, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 934, 2000 WL 126935 (N.D. Ill. 2000).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

KENNELLY, District Judge.

In this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, plaintiff James Klein claims th,at he was wrongfully beaten by Edward Vanek, a Chicago police officer, on July 9, 1995. The Court previously denied Vanek’s motion for summary judgment. Klein v. Vanek, No. 96 C 5834, 1999 WL 966968 (N.D.Ill. Oct. 5, 1999). The case is set for trial on January 31, 2000. At the final pretrial conference on January 27, 2000, the Court heard argument on Klein’s motion in limine and made oral rulings. The purpose of this Memorandum Opinion is to make a record of the basis for the Court’s rulings.

BACKGROUND

On the evening of July 9, 1995, two Chicago police officers, Vincent Krocka and Steven Composto, picked Klein up after Sue Vanek, the wife of defendant Va-nek, also a Chicago police officer, called the police to report that Klein had been stalking her. Specifically, she claimed that Klein had shown up outside her office and had made, a threatening gesture. There had been prior incidents between Klein and Sue Vanek, which at one point had led to criminal charges resulting in a guilty plea to a misdemeanor. However, Klein was not arrested or charged on the night of July 9. Instead, Krocka and Composto questioned him for approximately a half hour and then drove him to a parking lot near the intersection of Touhy and Lehigh, which was a few blocks from where he was staying. Klein says that the officers told him to get out of the car; the officers claim that this is where Klein asked to be let out. Just after Klein got out of the squad car, he was approached by a man whom he. identified as Vanek. Vanek hit him repeatedly with a golf club while another man, whom Klein could not see, hit him from behind. Klein says that after they finished beating him, the men drove away in a Cadillac. Another witness also saw the beating and the Cadillac but could not identify Klein’s assailants. Within a day, Klein had made a complaint against Vanek, Krocka, and Composto to the Chicago Police Department’s Office of Professional Standards, which began an investigation on July 11, A few days later, Sue Vanek pressed charges against Klein. He eventually pled guilty to a misdemeanor assault charge.

About one year later, Klein filed this lawsuit against.Edward Vanek, Sue Vanek, Krocka, and Composto under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, seeking compensation for the injuries he had suffered in the beating. Krocka and Composto settled with Klein, agreeing *815 to pay him $35,000 in return for dismissal of Klein’s claims against them. We granted summary judgment in favor of Sue' Vanek, leaving Klein’s claim against Edward Vanek as the only claim remaining for trial.

DISCUSSION

A. Testimony concerning “stalking” incidents

Klein has moved to bar Sue Vanek from testifying at trial, claiming that she has nothing to say that is relevant to the issues in this case. Defendant Vanek wants to call Sue to testify about the events of July 9 that preceded the assault on Klein and also about her prior encounters with Klein. We have already discussed the events of July 9. As for the prior encounters, Sue Vanek believed Klein was stalking her. There was a history of encounters that had begun two or three years before the July 1995 incident. Klein had come to Sue’s realty office and made inquiries about pfoperties that he may actually have had no interest in buying, and they had encountered each other at a shoe store near her office. Sue claimed that following these encounters, Klein had called her repeatedly and had left notes on her car when she did not respond. In 1994, Klein came to an open house Sue was sponsoring and supposedly threatened her with a poker. This led to a criminal charge and to a guilty plea by Klein to a misdemeanor charge.

Sue Vanek’s testimony about the events of July 9 prior to the beating of Klein is relevant and admissible. The testimony is helps to establish the time frame in which the events of July 9 occurred and provides evidence of Edward Vanek’s whereabouts on that evening. The testimony is highly probative concerning Va-nek’s claim that he was not, and could not have been, at the parking lot at the- time of the beating, and that he could not have conspired with Krocka and Composto. The only part of Sue Vanek’s testimony regarding these events that has the potential for being unfairly prejudicial to Klein is her rendition of seeing Klein outside her office -making a threatening gesture. However, it does not appear that Sue Va-nek’s testimony about what she saw will be seriously disputed; Klein’s counsel informed the Court at the pretrial conference that Klein will concede that he was outside the office and shook his fist at Sue. Any potential for unfair prejudice is outweighed by the fact that the testimony helps to explain why Kricka and Compos-to picked Klein up in the first place; without this testimony there would be a risk that the jury might erroneously believe that Klein was simply selected at random. We will, however, preclude Sue Vanek from testifying concerning her emotional reaction to seeing Klein; such testimony is not relevant and any marginal probative value that it may have would be far outweighed by the unfair prejudice to Klein if such testimony were admitted. In addition, Sue’s testimony about the events following the beating — in particular, her later encounter with Krocka and Composto at the police station, when they explained to her why they had not arrested Klein— are not relevant and are excluded from evidence.

The history of Klein’s prior encounters with Sue Vanek, assuming defendant’s characterization is accurate, certainly would be frightening to any reasonable person; assuming Klein again showed up outside her office on July 9 and made a threatening gesture, she had ample reason to call the police, Krocka and Composto had a proper basis to pick him up for questioning, and there was a legal basis for Sue Vanek’s later charge against Klein. But the trial in this case does not involve the propriety of Klein’s arrest or charge. Rather, the claims relate exclusively to the beating Klein received. It is no defense to this claim that Klein may have, in some sort of vigilante-like way, gotten what he had coming to him. And indeed that is not Vanek’s defense in the lawsuit: his contention is that he is not the person who beat Klein.

*816 Vanek does not contend (nor could he) that the “stalking” evidence should be admitted to show Klein’s bad character or as somehow mitigating the wrongfulness of the assault. Rather, he argues that Sue’s testimony about her prior encounters with Klein is relevant “to explain why [Klein] falsely identified [Edward Vanek] as one of his alleged attackers. [Klein] had stalked Sue Vanek for three years prior to July 9, 1995 and was familiar with Ed Vanek whom [sic] he perceived as an obstacle to the object of his obsession, Sue Vanek.” Defendant’s Response to Plaintiffs Motion in Limine, p. 3. However, Vanek has offered no support for the proposition that Klein “perceived [defendant] as an obstacle” to Sue Vanek.

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Bluebook (online)
86 F. Supp. 2d 812, 53 Fed. R. Serv. 1435, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 934, 2000 WL 126935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klein-v-vanek-ilnd-2000.