Marta Ruiz A/K/A Marta Ruiz Romero v. Generoso Gonzalez Caraballo, Etc.

929 F.2d 31, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 5285, 1991 WL 43679
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 2, 1991
Docket90-1468
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 929 F.2d 31 (Marta Ruiz A/K/A Marta Ruiz Romero v. Generoso Gonzalez Caraballo, Etc.) 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
Marta Ruiz A/K/A Marta Ruiz Romero v. Generoso Gonzalez Caraballo, Etc., 929 F.2d 31, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 5285, 1991 WL 43679 (1st Cir. 1991).

Opinion

SELYA, Circuit Judge.

In this case, there was evidence that plaintiff-appellee Marta Ruiz Romero (Ruiz), a thirty-six year old female in her thirty-seventh week of pregnancy, was beaten by Generoso Gonzalez Caraballo (Gonzalez), a police officer, on a public street in San Juan. Gonzalez’s fellow officer, Samuel Fontanez Berberena (Fonta-nez), stood by and, when requested, handcuffed the plaintiff. Ruiz was then thrown face down onto the floor of a nearby police cruiser and transported to the stationhouse by her attackers. She was hit several more times while in transit.

When Ruiz arrived at the station, she was slapped again and locked up. After far too long, she was removed from her cell and taken to the emergency room. Several hours later, Juan Comas Valle (Comas), a police sergeant, handcuffed Ruiz and took her from the municipal hospital to the Criminal Investigation Center. She was kept there for over seven hours. A total of twelve misdemeanor complaints were filed against Ruiz by Sergeants Comas and Merced Diaz (Merced), charging her with breach of the peace, aggression, resisting arrest, deadly threat, malicious destruction of property, and the like. The plaintiff was eventually exonerated on all counts.

Ruiz sued Gonzalez, Fontanez, Comas, Merced, and Lt. Alfredo Cortes Rivera (Cortes), who was in command at the precinct on the night in question. 1 The primary thrust of her action was under 42 *33 U.S.C. § 1983. The case was tried to a jury over a seven day span. At trial’s end, the judge asked the jury to enter its findings on a special verdict form (SVF). Neither side objected. The jury returned verdicts totalling $1,000,000. We summarize the contents of the completed SVF insofar as relevant to this appeal.

3. We, the Jury, unanimously find by a preponderance of the evidence that ... defendants [Gonzalez and Fontanez] did ... use excessive force during the arrest of plaintiff.... [and] award plaintiff the sum of $150,000 in compensation for the use of excessive force during her arrest.
4. We, the Jury, unanimously find by a preponderance of the evidence that [all five] defendants did initiate a prosecution against plaintiff, either maliciously or for an illegitimate purpose.... [and] award plaintiff the sum of $100,000 for this malicious or illegitimate prosecution.
5. We, the Jury, unanimously find by a preponderance of the evidence that [all five] defendants did continue the incarceration of plaintiff after it was apparent that there was no probable cause for her detention.... [and] award plaintiff the sum of $50,000 for her continued detention.
6. We, the Jury, unanimously find by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant Generoso Gonzalez Caraballo did ... use excessive force against the plaintiff during her detention.... [and] award the plaintiff the sum of $75,000 as compensation for the use of excessive force during her detention.
7. We, the Jury, unanimously find by a preponderance of the evidence that the plaintiff will ... continue to suffer damages as a result of the acts and omissions of the [defendant Gonzalez].... [and] award plaintiff the sum of $400,000 to compensate her continuing damages.
8. We, the Jury, unanimously find by a preponderance of the evidence that the following defendants [Fontanez, Comas, Merced, and Cortes] did ... proximately cause a deprivation of the plaintiffs civil right to liberty by failing to intervene when fellow officers deprived the plaintiff of her civil right to liberty.... [and] award the plaintiff the sum of $100,000 as compensation.
9. We, the Jury, unanimously find by a preponderance of the evidence that [all five] defendants did ... conspire to deprive the plaintiff of her civil rights.... [and] award the plaintiff the sum of $100,000 as compensation.
10. We, the Jury, unanimously find by a preponderance of the evidence that the plaintiff_ is entitled to recover punitive damages from the [defendant Gonzalez] in the [sum of] ... $25,000.
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A number of post-trial motions were filed. The district judge upheld the verdict on liability. He determined, however, that certain damage awards were duplicative and/or excessive. Consequently, he authored a careful, precise rescript explaining his thought processes and ordered a remit-titur aggregating $600,000. For perspective’s sake, we think it helpful to divide the remittitur order into three constituent parts. (1) The judge refused to disturb either the $150,000 award against Gonzalez and Fontanez for the use of excessive force during Ruiz’s arrest (SYF No. 3) or the $25,000 punitive damage award against Gonzalez (SVF No. 10). (2) The judge reduced three of the awards substantially, cutting the $400,000 award for future damages (SVF No. 7) to $200,000, the $100,000 award for malicious prosecution (SVF No. 4) to $10,000, and the $75,000 award for excessive force during Ruiz’s detention (SVF No. 6) to $15,000. 2 (3) The judge obliterated the awards numbered 5, .8, and 9 on the SVF.

In due course, the plaintiff signified her willingness to accept the reduced recovery. Gonzalez and Fontanez now appeal.

We need not dwell on how the case arose, inasmuch as the appellants no longer contest liability. In this appeal, they as *34 sign error only in respect to two aspects of damages, 3 contending that both the jury award of $150,000 on the “excessive force during arrest” claim and the judge’s (post-remittitur) figure of $200,000 for future damages are grossly excessive. In our estimation, neither point has merit.

We have patiently reviewed the record and believe, as did the court below, that the evidence fully supports a $150,000 compensatory damage award for the unnecessary force employed by appellants at the time of plaintiffs arrest. The beating was brutal. In consequence of it, the plaintiff developed what her psychiatrist diagnosed as a post-traumatic stress disorder. The jury obviously believed that Ruiz’s claimed suffering and emotional distress were real, prolonged, and caused by the constables’ acts. Given the testimony of plaintiff and the witnesses she produced, the jury was entitled to draw those conclusions. See, e.g., Betancourt v. J.C. Penney Co., 554 F.2d 1206, 1207 (1st Cir.1977) (in considering appropriateness of verdict, court of appeals must view the evidence “in the light most favorable to [the prevailing party]”).

To be sure, it is surpassingly difficult on the basis of an algid appellate record to quantify money damages for intangible losses. Yet that difficulty must be resolved in favor of the factfinders. After all, “[translating legal damage into money damages — especially in cases which involve few significant items of measurable economic loss — is a matter peculiarly within a jury’s ken.” Wagenmann v. Adams, 829 F.2d 196, 215 (1st Cir.1987).

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Bluebook (online)
929 F.2d 31, 1991 U.S. App. LEXIS 5285, 1991 WL 43679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marta-ruiz-aka-marta-ruiz-romero-v-generoso-gonzalez-caraballo-etc-ca1-1991.