Lindsey v. Macias

907 F.3d 517
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 23, 2018
DocketNo. 17-2963
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 907 F.3d 517 (Lindsey v. Macias) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindsey v. Macias, 907 F.3d 517 (7th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

Brennan, Circuit Judge.

After the State of Illinois dismissed criminal charges against plaintiff-appellant Calvin Lindsey for unlawful possession of a weapon, he filed this civil action asserting claims for false arrest, excessive force, false imprisonment, and malicious prosecution under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and state law assault and battery. At trial, the jury returned a unanimous defense verdict on all counts.

On appeal, Lindsey seeks to vacate the judgment for two reasons. First, he contends the district court erred in refusing to modify its jury instruction on "possession" to stress that "mere proximity" to a gun is insufficient. Second, he asserts the district court abused its discretion by denying the jurors' request for a copy of a potentially impeaching interrogatory answer.

Neither of Lindsey's arguments warrants reversal. Our precedent rejects a requirement that a possession instruction include language expressly disclaiming the sufficiency of "mere proximity," and Lindsey presents no persuasive reason to reconsider those holdings or reach a different result here. And the district court was well within its discretion in refusing to send into the jury room a document not admitted into evidence. Therefore, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Arrest on April 28, 20121

During the early morning hours of April 28, 2012, Lindsey and three female friends were drinking beer and watching television in a basement level apartment in Chicago. Suddenly, four Chicago police officers kicked in the door, grabbed Lindsey from behind, threw him to the floor, and arrested him. Never in his life had Lindsey used a gun, he never saw one on April 28, 2012, and he never went into his sister-in-law's first floor bedroom that night.

That is how Lindsey tells it. The defendant-appellee police officers paint a strikingly different picture.

According to them, Officers Macias and Perez received an emergency call about a "male with a gun," and all four officers arrived on scene at about 3:35 a.m. An unidentified man standing on the porch directed the officers inside the building's first floor apartment, stating only, "He's in there." Upon entering, they encountered approximately ten people milling about a party, and one attendee informed Officer *519Gentile, "The man with the gun is in the back. He pointed it at my face."

When Officer Gentile looked up, a man saw him and fled into the first floor bedroom, slamming the door behind him. After announcing their presence and knocking, the officers opened the bedroom door and saw Lindsey sitting on a mattress next to one woman. Gentile found a gun on the bedroom floor, about two feet in front of Lindsey. None of the four officers ever saw the gun on Lindsey's person. Officer Macias arrested Lindsey and escorted him out.

B. Subsequent Litigation

Lindsey was charged with unlawful possession of a weapon by a convicted felon. Three months later, after the state court suppressed the gun evidence, prosecutors dismissed the criminal case. Lindsey then filed this lawsuit, asserting violations of his constitutional rights and various tort claims. The jury trial in this civil case lasted four days.

1. The district court rejects Lindsey's modification to jury instruction on "possession."

At the jury instruction conference, Lindsey's attorneys objected to the district court's proposed instruction regarding "possession," which was based on Seventh Circuit Pattern Criminal Jury Instruction 4.13 and read in relevant part:

A person possesses an object if he has the ability and intention to exercise direction or control over the object, either directly or through others. A person may possess an object even if he is not in physical contact with it and even if he does not own it.

Worried this pattern instruction might lead jurors to incorrectly conflate physical proximity to a gun with constructive possession, Lindsey's attorneys asked the district court to add the following language: "The mere proximity to the contraband is not enough to establish possession."

The district court denied Lindsey's request, explaining that the first sentence of the instruction already emphasized the requirement that a person have the ability and intention to exercise control over the object, so the jury would not think that "mere proximity" would be sufficient. Moreover, the district court preferred defining what constitutes possession, rather than what does not. Lindsey's attorneys were permitted to make this "mere proximity" point during their closing argument, which they did.

2. The district court denies the jury's request for Officer Gentile's interrogatory answer.

During trial, Lindsey's attorneys cross-examined Officer Gentile on his pre-trial answer to an interrogatory asking him to identify potential witnesses:

[T]he women who were with Plaintiff Lindsey in the room where Plaintiff Lindsey was placed under arrest, whose names he does not know, may have knowledge of the events leading up to Plaintiff Lindsey being placed under arrest.

On the witness stand, however, Officer Gentile adamantly denied that multiple women had been in the bedroom, instead testifying that the reference to "women" in his interrogatory answer was a typographical error. The interrogatory answer was never moved or admitted into evidence, as Lindsey's counsel simply incorporated its substance into their cross-examination.

Later, during deliberations, the jury sent the district court the following note:

May we see or have access to Gentile's interrogative [sic] response where he states/refers to 'women,' 'their,' &
*520'names,' (indicating plurals). If not, may we get clarification as to which room he is referring to?

Lindsey's counsel offered a copy of Gentile's interrogatory answer to send back, while defense counsel staunchly objected that the document was not in evidence.

The district court expressed concern that sending the interrogatory answer to the jury might "unnecessarily highlight one piece of evidence over another piece of evidence" or "cause deliberations to go down a road where they ask for more things that I can't give them, like testimony." So, the district court instructed the jury, "The answer to your request is that you must rely on your collective recollection of the evidence and testimony at the trial." While maintaining their objection to the district court's decision, Lindsey's attorneys did not object to the "wordsmithing" of the response.

The jury returned a unanimous verdict in favor of the defendants on all of Lindsey's claims, and the district court entered judgment accordingly.

II. ANALYSIS

A. Jury Instruction on Possession

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
907 F.3d 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindsey-v-macias-ca7-2018.