Kossler v. Crisanti

564 F.3d 181, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 8432, 2009 WL 1054678
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 21, 2009
Docket06-3241
StatusPublished
Cited by277 cases

This text of 564 F.3d 181 (Kossler v. Crisanti) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kossler v. Crisanti, 564 F.3d 181, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 8432, 2009 WL 1054678 (3d Cir. 2009).

Opinions

OPINION

FISHER, Circuit Judge, with whom SCIRICA, Chief Judge, BARRY, FUENTES, SMITH, CHAGARES, JORDAN and HARDIMAN, Circuit Judges, join.

This appeal raises a discrete issue involving a malicious prosecution claim brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Pennsylvania state law: Whether a conviction for disorderly conduct and a contemporaneous acquittal for aggravated assault and public intoxication under the relevant Pennsylvania statutes constitute a favorable termination of the state criminal proceeding against the plaintiff whose intentional physical contact against a municipal police officer underlies all three offenses. For the reasons that follow, under this particular factual scenario, the plaintiffs criminal proceeding did not end in his favor. Accordingly, we will affirm the order of the District Court granting summary judgment, as well as its order denying reconsideration.

I.

A. The Events of the Night of the Fight

At approximately 11:00 p.m. on November 11, 2001, thirty-nine-year-old X-ray technician Michael Kossler, his friend John Treleeki, and one other friend arrived at Donzi’s Bar in Pittsburgh’s Strip District and socialized, talked, walked around, and danced. While there, Kossler had a couple of beers but claims not to have consumed any alcohol prior to arriving at Donzi’s.

Steven Crisanti, a City of Pittsburgh police officer, was working an off-duty detail, or secondary employment position,1 that night at Donzi’s, where he had worked for about two years. With the exception [184]*184of not wearing his official police baseball cap, Crisanti was dressed in his full police uniform. These secondary employment officers were paid in cash each night by Donzi’s parent corporation.

Kossler and Trelecki left Donzi’s at approximately 2:00 a.m. Upon exiting the bar, the two men walked up a ramp toward a parking lot located next to Donzi’s entrance. They had not yet arrived in the parking lot when a fight broke out on the sidewalk at the top of the ramp. When the fight started, Crisanti was standing in the parking lot.

Crisanti and Kossler provide different accounts of what occurred next. According to Crisanti, when he tried to go to break up the fight, Kossler grabbed him from behind and twisted him around. Crisanti responded by pushing Kossler away and ran toward the fight, but Donzi’s security had already broken it up before Crisanti reached it. According to Trelecki, he and Crisanti were friends, and he had tapped Crisanti on the back to let him know that he was going to help him in breaking up the fight. Kossler confirms Treleeki’s version of the events by stating that he was not the one who touched or grabbed Crisanti because he was standing near the valet stand several feet away waiting for his car.

With respect to what happened after the fight ended, Crisanti states that he approached Kossler to ask why Kossler had grabbed him and to warn Kossler not to touch a police officer again. At that point, Kossler became irate, “came at” Crisanti, and bent his middle finger and forefinger completely back on Crisanti’s left hand. While Crisanti tried to pull his fingers free, he grabbed his pepper spray with his other hand and sprayed Kossler, at which point Kossler released Crisanti’s left hand.

Kossler, in turn, states that Crisanti was yelling “in a loud, screaming, irate voice” that Kossler should not have touched him. Crisanti also pointed his finger in Kossler’s face and forced Kossler to back up. Afraid that he would be slapped or punched, Kossler told Crisanti that he had recently undergone surgery on his nose and asked Crisanti: “[P]lease, get your hand out of my face.” When Crisanti touched Kossler’s nose, Kossler “moved” or “pushed” Crisanti’s hand away in a nonviolent manner. Then Crisanti sprayed Kossler, and handcuffed and arrested him.

B. Crisanti’s Police Report

Following the incident, Crisanti completed and filed a City of Pittsburgh Bureau of Police Offense / Incident Report, which identified Kossler as the aggressor and recounted:

“As I tried to break up the fight another w/m (later identified as Kossler, Michael) grabbed me and pulled me away from the two actors. As the security men broke up the fight, I approached Kossler, he became very loud yelling ‘fuck you’ he then started charging at me, I put my arm out ordering h[im] to ‘stop,’ but he kept coming and grab[bed] a hold of my left hand bending them backwards. I tried to pull my hand away, but he would not let go.... P.O. is going to [hospital] for treatment of my left hand. Nature of injury was swelling to my knuckles, middle, and ring fingers. Actor (Kossler) was inside the bar and smelled of alcohol.”

Kossler was charged with the first-degree felony of aggravated assault and the summary offenses of disorderly conduct and public intoxication. Crisanti’s police report listed “A.A. 2702(a)(2), 5503 Disorderly, Public Intox 5505” to denote the Pennsylvania statutory provisions covering each of the offenses charged. On November 21, 2001, Kossler appeared for a preliminary hearing before a state court mag[185]*185istrate. Although only portions of the hearing transcript are contained in the record, counsel at oral argument stated that it was during this hearing that Kossler’s aggravated assault charge was reduced from the first-degree felony under section 2702(a)(2) to the second-degree felony under section 2702(a)(3).

C. Bench Trial Before Pennsylvania Common Pleas Judge

In a non-jury trial before Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas Judge Robert E. Colville on July 18, 2002, Kossler was found not guilty of aggravated assault and public intoxication, but was found guilty of disorderly conduct and fined one hundred dollars. Judge Colville explained:

“There were an awful lot of misperceptions going on that evening in the parking lot. Basically, there were a lot of people moving around and there was a lot of involvement and anger and people were drinking, and the consensus of that is nobody knows precisely exactly what happened.
My own personal belief in this, I don’t see any misdemeanors or any felonies, it’s not an aggravated assault, it isn’t, simply isn’t.
I’m going to find him guilty of a summary offense of DC.
Basically, you were in the wrong place, wrong time and the officer addressed you, when he came over, whether he was mistaken or not, when he’s putting his hand up he’s obviously putting himself at risk trying to break up what he feels — it may well have been your friend who touched him but he doesn’t have time seeing which one of you did it, he’s going to respond, he just is, and he’s going to be upset, whether appropriate or not, having been in his uniform, and having done this I understand why he did what he did, he was upset, that’s •why he came to you, he doesn’t recognize you, that’s another fact, but at this point you have to respond, not by taking — hitting his hand away, but it’s obvious he’s put out, he’s the only one there that hasn’t been drinking all night, and he’s the only one that has to be responsible.
I think he acted reasonable; I think it got out of hand, but the charges don’t fit the crime.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
564 F.3d 181, 2009 U.S. App. LEXIS 8432, 2009 WL 1054678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kossler-v-crisanti-ca3-2009.