KOVALEV v. CLAIBORNE

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 2, 2020
Docket2:20-cv-00188
StatusUnknown

This text of KOVALEV v. CLAIBORNE (KOVALEV v. CLAIBORNE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
KOVALEV v. CLAIBORNE, (E.D. Pa. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA SERGEI KOVALEV, : CIVIL ACTION Plaintiff, : v. NO. 20-188 MEGHAN CLAIBORNE, et al. Defendants. : MEMORANDUM KEARNEY, J. March 2, 2020 Having lost a jury trial in January 2018 and then an appeal after repeatedly challenging the veracity of an admitted exhibit, Sergei Kovalev pro se now tries challenging the same exhibit in this new lawsuit by arguing the opposing trial lawyers and their client state actors deprived him of his First Amendment and due process rights by introducing the same exhibit. He again recites his pursuit of administrative appeals with respect to Philadelphia’s collection of commercial refuse fees assessed against a House of Worship where he maintains some type of ownership or management role. The jury already rejected these arguments. We admitted the exhibit at the January 2018 trial after affording Mr. Kovalev extensive opportunities to challenge it. He made this same argument before us and our Court of Appeals. He lost both times. His claims entirely lack merit. We must dismiss his Complaint under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e)(2)(B)(ii). I. Pro se allegations Sergei Kovalev either owns or manages a House of Worship in Philadelphia and believes it is not obligated to pay commercial refuse fees to the City. He first attended a first-level informal hearing conducted by the Philadelphia Office of Administrative Review on October 14, 2015 during which he contends Hearing Master Agostino J. Fanelli subjected him to “intimidation.”? Following this hearing, Mr. Kovalev sent a “letter-complaint” to Executive Director Paula Weiss

stating Hearing Master Fanelli “pretend[ed] to be a ‘judge’ in his ‘courtroom.’”? This complaint initiated “harassment, abuses, and other unlawful acts.”? Mr. Kovalev requested second-level review and attended a December 10, 2015 Tax Review Board hearing. The Tax Review Board refused to decide his appeal and instructed him “to deliver some papers that did not even exist.”® Mr. Kovalev concludes the “Tax Review Board [is] a plain swindle and sham that was invented by the City in its efforts to deny honest services to Philadelphia residents.” Mr. Kovalev’s claims arise from events occurring both during and after the December 10, 2015 Tax Review Board hearing, for which he has already asserted a separate civil rights cause of action.’ Mr. Kovalev alleges his earlier case covered “the attack . . . inflicted by the sheriff's squadron leader Brown” and the “false phone call orchestrated by Defendants Weiss and [Yolanda] Kennedy.’® Having presided over his first case through trial, we are well aware of his allegations.” Although we dismissed the majority of his claims, Mr. Kovalev proceeded to trial on his First Amendment claims for retaliation based on the alleged false reporting by Executive Director Weiss and Supervisor Kennedy only.!° The jury returned a unanimous verdict, and we entered judgment on January 12, 2018 in favor of defendants and against Mr. Kovalev on all remaining claims.!! Our Court of Appeals affirmed. Mr. Kovalev now alleges (at the January 10-12, 2018 trial before this Court), the City’s lawyers Meghan Claiborne and Shannon Zabel, along with Director Weiss, Supervisor Kennedy and Hearing Master Fanelli selected an “absolutely irrelevant exhibit representing a form used by Defendant Fanelli during the October 14, 2015 hearing” which contained Fanelli’s handwritten notes.!? Mr. Kovalev alleges the “fraudulent document” consists of “a handwritten form prepared by [a] municipal employee, who was intentionally falsifying the official documents and was concocting a false record.”!3 Mr. Kovalev alleges Defendants “tampered with inclusion of

fraudulent and falsified handwriting representing the words, ‘T. P. Nasty. Used Profanity,” which Mr. Kovalev interprets as meaning “Taxpayer Nasty. Used Profanity.”!* Mr. Kovalev alleges Hearing Master Fanelli intentionally fabricated false evidence and tampered with the document to “include false, derogatory, and fraudulent statements” about him with the intention “all municipal Defendants” use the document during the jury trial “to spoil the jury members with false and fraudulent . . . fabrications.”!> Mr. Kovalev alleges Attorneys Claiborne and Zabel, “as salaried City attorneys,” prepared Hearing Master Fanelli’s “falsified document” for use during trial, intending to injure Mr. Kovalev at trial.'© Mr. Kovalev further alleges Attorneys Claiborne and Zabel conspired with all of the other state actors to use the “fraudulent exhibit” at trial “to spoil the jury with false and fraudulent so-called ‘evidence’” and injure Mr. Kovalev.!” Mr. Kovalev alleges “jury members were improperly exposed to Defendant Fanelli’s fraudulent document” during the trial and Attorney Claiborne “intentionally read aloud to the jury false and fraudulent notes specifically fabricated by [Hearing Master] Fanelli for the purpose of injuring [his] chances to prevail.”!® He further alleges “jury members were also intentionally exposed to Defendants’ witnesses, whom the Defendants Meghan Claiborne and Shannon Zabel, specifically prepared for the trial.”'? Mr. Kovalev alleges our January 2018 trial was “futile because Defendants . . . intentionally spoiled the jury panel” by introduction of “Defendants’ fraudulent exhibit and Defendants’ specifically prepared witnesses.”*° As a result of Defendants’ alleged fraudulent activities, Mr. Kovalev contends he lost his case and suffered injury and harm.”! He seeks compensatory and punitive damages for: violation of the First Amendment of the United States Constitution; violation of Due Process and the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution; conspiracy to violate Constitutional rights;”? failure to supervise and properly

train; and negligent infliction of emotional distress. After review consistent with Congress’s mandate upon granting leave to proceed without paying the required fees, we must dismiss. Il. Analysis On January 29, 2020, we granted Mr. Kovalev leave to proceed in forma pauperis as he was not capable of paying the fees necessary to commence this action.** We must now screen his Complaint to see if he states a claim. Whether a complaint fails to state a claim under section 1915(e)(2)(B)(ii) requires we determine whether Mr. Kovalev pleads “sufficient factual matter, accepted as true, to state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.”*°> Conclusory statements and naked assertions will not suffice.2° As Mr. Kovalev is proceeding pro se, we construe his allegations liberally.?’ A. We dismiss the First Amendment claim with prejudice. We understand Mr. Kovalev is bringing a claim for First Amendment retaliation based on the introduction of an exhibit at his January 10-12, 2018 trial. Mr. Kovalev alleges Defendants intentionally created fabricated and false evidence which “constituted unlawful retaliation . . . by public official for engaging in activity protected by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.”® Mr. Kovalev alleges his conduct in “appealing and disputing erroneous municipal decisions, and attending public hearings” is protected by the First Amendment, and “it was not a sufficient reason for the involved Defendants to become engaged in activities of fabricating and using false evidence in federal court trial and jury tampering.” To plead a plausible civil rights claim for First Amendment retaliation, Mr. Kovalev must allege: “(1) constitutionally protected conduct, (2) a retaliatory action sufficient to deter a person of ordinary firmness from exercising his constitutional rights, and (3) a causal link between the constitutionally protected conduct and the retaliatory action.”*° To allege the requisite causal link

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Bluebook (online)
KOVALEV v. CLAIBORNE, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kovalev-v-claiborne-paed-2020.