MacDonald v. Town of Windham

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 15, 2007
Docket06-CV-245-JD
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
MacDonald v. Town of Windham, (D.N.H. 2007).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

Michael and Marisol MacDonald

v. Civil No. 06-cv-245~JD Opinion No. 2 007 DNH 139 Town of Windhamf et al.

O R D E R

Michael and Marisol MacDonald bring federal civil rights claims pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, along with related state law claims, against Marisol's former husband, Randy Guilbault, Windham Police Officer Daniel Clark, and the Town of Windham. The MacDonalds' claims arise from the circumstances of Michael MacDonald's arrest by Clark on August 1, 2004, on a charge of disorderly conduct. Clark and the town moved for summary judgment and Guilbault joins their motion. The MacDonalds object to the motion.

Background

Marisol married Randy Guilbault in July of 1987, and they have two children, Brandon and Kyle Guilbault. In April of 2002, the Guilbaults began divorce proceedings; they were divorced on January 2, 2003. Marisol and Michael MacDonald were engaged in April of 2004 and were married in August of 2004. Michael has two children from a previous marriage. During the spring of 2 004, custody and visitation disputes arose about the Guilbault children's visits with their father. The Windham police became involved in the custody and visitation disputes when Guilbault called them for assistance in the process of exchanging children for visits on eight occasions. The MacDonalds acknowledge that Guilbault had court-ordered visitation rights on all of the days on which incidents occurred, except possibly one. May 21. The MacDonalds nevertheless disputed Guilbault's visitation rights, and Marisol "filed paperwork in the Nashua District Court seeking to revoke Guilbault's overnight visitations for various reasons."1 Obj . at

Officer Daniel Clark responded to two calls about visitation issues, one on April 3 0 and the other on May 21. officers Gregory Malisos and Jessica Flynn, Captain Patrick Yatsevich, and Sergeant Carl Wagner responded on other occasions. The MacDonalds videotaped some of these events. The DVD produced by the MacDonalds of their videotapes shows that the MacDonalds were agitated and angry during the incidents,

during the time of the events in question, Marisol's name was Marisol Guilbault. To avoid confusion, the plaintiffs are nevertheless referred to as the MacDonalds. 2 arguing with Guilbault, accusing Guilbault of lying and of stalking Marisol, accusing the police of misconduct, and arguing loudly with the police officers. Michael MacDonald ordered Guilbault and a police officer away from his property during one incident. During another incident, Marisol became so agitated that she reached out, gesticulating with her hands and touching the police officer. Marisol states in her affidavit that she also touched the officer on his arm while talking with him in his cruiser and that the officer told her that she was assaulting him.2 The MacDonalds also videotaped Guilbault at the children's baseball games. On July 8, 2004, the MacDonalds attended a youth all-star baseball game at the town field. Michael was an assistant coach for one of the teams, and his son, Michael jr., and Marisol's son, Kyle Guilbault, played on the team. Randy Guilbault brought his sons to the game and stayed to watch. When he arrived at the field, the MacDonalds began to videotape him. The videotape shows that Guilbault walked toward the MacDonalds, and Marisol asked Brandon to go speak to his father.

2 That incident arose when the MacDonalds delayed the Guilbault children's visit with their father by an hour but refused to extend the visit for an hour. The children had to be exchanged at the police station.

3 Guilbault called the Windham police to report that MacDonald was harassing him by videotaping him and asked for help. Officer Clark responded to the call and arrived at the baseball field a few minutes later. Clark first talked with Guilbault, who complained that Michael MacDonald was following him with a video camera, and then walked toward the MacDonalds, with Guilbault walking behind him. Michael MacDonald videotaped Clark as he approached. Clark asked MacDonald what was going on with the video camera. Mot. Ex. 5 at 26:02. MacDonald asked if videotaping were illegal, repeating his statement several times with increasing volume and vehemence. Guilbault walked to the stands and sat down. The videotape shows two women sitting next to the stands with an umbrella shading them and a child sitting on one woman's lap. Mot. Ex. 5 at 26:15. Marisol and Michael told Clark that they had all been in court that morning to address Marisol's charges that Guilbault was following her, assaulting her, and calling the police.

Michael MacDonald and Guilbault exchanged remarks - - Guilbault said quietly that Michael should not be there. MacDonald responded loudly that he was a coach of the team. Guilbault agreed but said that the judge told MacDonald not to be there. MacDonald responded angrily and loudly: "You are lying

4 again." MacDonald then asked Guilbault to repeat what he had previously said. In the background, one or both of the women sitting next to the stands can be heard saying, "Come on, enough," and other remarks that are less distinct. Mot. Ex. 5 at 26:33-38. Guilbault responded to their concern by asking Michael, in a quiet voice, to calm down. The videotape then jiggled out of control and eventually stabilized on scenes of people watching the baseball game and Guilbault using his cell phone. The MacDonalds assert that when the video camera was turned off, Clark's "demeanor became extremely unpleasant," that he accused Michael of harassing Guilbault, that he ordered Michael to stop talking to Guilbault, and that he warned Michael that he would be arrested if he said anything else. Obj. at 8. Marisol states in her affidavit that Clark also ordered her not to talk to Guilbault and to go to the other side of the field. The parties agree that the situation resolved when Michael MacDonald resumed his coaching duties and Marisol went to the other side of the baseball field. Officer Clark testified in his deposition that he came to the baseball field in response to Guilbault's call. He found Michael MacDonald videotaping and asked him why he was doing that. Clark testified that MacDonald asked him repeatedly whether it was illegal to videotape and that MacDonald and

5 Guilbault exchanged words. At that time, Patricia Petron, one of the parents watching the game, asked both MacDonald and Guilbault to stop and said that she was sick of the kids having to see this, and Clark also asked them to stop. Clark described Guilbault's voice as a normal speaking tone and MacDonald's voice as "extremely raised" or yelling. Guilbault testified to similar events at the July 8 baseball game and also remembered that Patricia Petron asked them to stop arguing. Patricia ("Trish") Petron, whose husband was head coach of the team the MacDonald and Guilbault boys played on, stated that MacDonald was talking loudly to Clark and that Clark's voice was very low. She also stated that the MacDonalds and Guilbault were arguing loudly and that she asked them to be quiet because children were there. She stated that Michael MacDonald was doing the majority of the loud arguing and that he would not stop.3 Petron also testified at a bench trial in January of 2006 on the disorderly conduct charge against Michael MacDonald. She related the same circumstances during her testimony and said that she was upset because children were present. Both Marisol and Michael

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MacDonald v. Town of Windham, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macdonald-v-town-of-windham-nhd-2007.