Lamboy-Ortiz v. Ortiz-Velez

630 F.3d 228, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 25802, 94 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 44,065, 2010 WL 5129824
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 17, 2010
Docket09-1640
StatusPublished
Cited by103 cases

This text of 630 F.3d 228 (Lamboy-Ortiz v. Ortiz-Velez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamboy-Ortiz v. Ortiz-Velez, 630 F.3d 228, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 25802, 94 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 44,065, 2010 WL 5129824 (1st Cir. 2010).

Opinion

LIPEZ, Circuit Judge.

This appeal involves an award of close to $130,000 in attorney’s fees against unsuccessful civil rights plaintiffs and over $60,000 in sanctions against plaintiffs’ counsel personally. Plaintiffs, who survived various dispositive motions and proceeded to a jury trial on their claims, argue that their lawsuit was not so unfounded or unreasonable as to justify an award of fees to the defendant in a civil rights lawsuit. We agree and therefore vacate the fee award.

We conclude, however, that the district court did not abuse its discretion in imposing sanctions on plaintiffs’ counsel, whose vexatious conduct and manifest disrespect of the district court proceedings stand out even in the dry pages of the record on appeal. Still, the amount of the sanction far exceeds what could be justified in the name of deterrence. We therefore reduce the sanction to $5,000.

I.

Plaintiffs Pedro Lamboy-Ortiz (Lam-boy-Ortiz) and Roberto Figueroa-Montalvo (Figueroa-Montalvo) were formerly employed as policemen in the municipality of Sabana Grande, Puerto Rico, and are members of Puerto Rico’s New Progressive Party (NPP). In this lawsuit, Lam-boy-Ortiz and Figueroa-Montalvo alleged that the defendants, including the Mayor of Sabana Grande and various members of the Sabana Grande and Puerto Rico Police, each of whom belongs to the opposition Popular Democratic Party (PDP), conspired to deprive them of their civil rights and effectively remove them from the local police force.

A. Events Underlying the Plaintiffs’ Civil Rights Suit 1

The dispute has its roots in an incident that allegedly occurred on December 15, 2001 in the Sabana Grande police station, on the day of a visit to Sabana Grande by Sila Calderon, then Governor of Puerto Rico and leader of the PDP. In anticipation of the governor’s arrival, Mayor Miguel Ortiz-Vélez called the police station and asked for an officer to be dispatched to the Sabana Grande City Hall to pick up a framed picture of the governor for display in the police station. Marisol Vargas-Santiago (Vargas-Santiago) was on duty at the station’s main desk and received the call. She responded to the Mayor’s call by detailing officer José Santana-Pérez (Santana-Pérez) to retrieve the picture.

What happened upon Santana-Pérez’s return is contested. Officer Vargas-San *232 tiago alleges that Sergeant FigueroaMontalvo made offensive comments about Governor Calderon during the portrait’s hanging, 2 and that Lieutenant LamboyOrtiz, who was Assistant Commander of the Sabana Grande District and the officer responsible for supervising the station at the time, indicated his agreement with Figueroa-Montalvo’s off-color comments. Figueroa-Montalvo and Lamboy-Ortiz have denied that there were any such comments. Of the witnesses present at the time of the alleged comments, the only one who has corroborated Vargas-Santiago’s account — Santana-Pérez—appears to have later recanted. 3

Nonetheless, Vargas-Santiago filed administrative charges shortly after the alleged incident, precipitating a comprehensive internal investigation. Responsibility for the investigation initially rested with defendant Emilio Laboy-Castillo (LaboyCastillo), Commander of the Puerto Rico Police in Sabana Grande, but was later transferred to an officer from the Office for Public Integrity. Over the course of several months, the investigators interviewed more than ten potential witnesses to the alleged offensive comments, many of whom were questioned on several occasions.

Within a month or so of the alleged comments, both plaintiffs were transferred out of Sabana Grande to different districts. Lamboy-Ortiz was reassigned to the district of Mayagiiez immediately following the incident, apparently to fill a staffing need. Figueroa-Montalvo was transferred to Ponce the next month, after complaints from defendant Vargas-Santiago that she was afraid of sharing a shift with him. 4

In January 2002, in the early stages of the internal investigation, Commander La-boy-Castillo ordered Lamboy-Ortiz and Figueroa-Montalvo to meet with the Assistant District Attorney. Criminal charges were filed against both men the same day, listing Laboy-Castillo as the accusing witness. Figueroa-Montalvo was charged with breach of the peace under Article 260 of the Puerto Rico Penal Code, which criminalizes the use of “vulgar, profane or indecent language in the presence ... of women or children.” P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 33, § 4521(c). Lamboy-Ortiz, in turn, was charged with a violation of Article 214 of the Penal Code, “noncompliance with duty,” for failure to curb Figueroa-Montal *233 vo’s alleged improper behavior. See id. § 4365. Each violation was punishable by a maximum prison sentence of six months and/or a fine of up to $500.

Lamboy-Ortiz and Figueroa-Montalvo subsequently received letters in December 2002 from the Superintendent of the Puerto Rico Police, defendant Miguel Pereira, informing them that they were being suspended as a result of the improper conduct allegedly uncovered by the internal investigation. The letters further declared the Superintendent’s intention to expel them.

The officers were not expelled, however. Lamboy-Ortiz and Figueroa-Montalvo each appealed their suspension through administrative channels, and the sanction against each was reduced in 2003 to five months of suspension without pay. 5 The criminal proceedings also eventually resolved favorably for the plaintiffs: in January 2004, a commonwealth court found both officers not guilty of their respective criminal charges.

B. Procedural History

The plaintiffs filed suit in December 2002, naming as defendants Mayor OrtizVélez and a number of police personnel involved in the administrative investigations into and actions taken against the plaintiffs. At the heart of the plaintiffs’ complaint was the firm conviction that Mayor Ortiz-Vélez had orchestrated the various adverse actions taken against them, purportedly to fulfill a campaign pledge to oust NPP members from the Sabana Grande police force.

The plaintiffs’ suit rested on three interrelated claims. 6 First, the plaintiffs asserted a claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for political discrimination in violation of the First Amendment, alleging that they were targeted by defendants because of their association with the NPP. The plaintiffs’ second claim, also under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleged deprivation of Fourteenth Amendment due process rights in connection with the administrative investigations and actions against them. Third, the plaintiffs brought a pendent claim under the Puerto Rico Anti-Discrimination Act (also known as Law 100), which provides a cause of action for, among other things, employment discrimination on the basis of political affiliation. See P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 29, § 146.

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630 F.3d 228, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 25802, 94 Empl. Prac. Dec. (CCH) 44,065, 2010 WL 5129824, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamboy-ortiz-v-ortiz-velez-ca1-2010.